Editorial
published in The New York Times
The Ebola cases in the United States show
that American hospitals and public health officials have much to learn about
effective ways to protect health care workers and the public from possible
infection.
Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital, the
first hospital put to the test, failed to protect two nurses, who had cared for
the Ebola victim Thomas Eric Duncan, from becoming infected. Perhaps more
alarming are the stumbles by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
the lead federal agency for fighting infectious diseases.
One of the nurses, who was monitoring her
own temperature, called the C.D.C. and was allowed to take a commercial flight
from Cleveland to Dallas-Fort Worth even though she had a slight fever, which
did not violate current guidelines. That was an incredible lapse in judgment by
the C.D.C.
Health officials and the flight’s airline
are now scrambling to notify passengers, crew members and janitors who cleaned
the planes she traveled on of possible exposure. While the danger to those
people appears slight, this incident shows that the C.D.C. needs to lower the
fever threshold in its guidance and advise against any travel on public forms
of transportation for 21 days by people who have potentially been exposed to
the virus.
There is more the agency ought to do. It
should be increasing the rigor of its guidelines on protective clothing for
health care workers, hospital readiness, and training on the handling of Ebola
cases. President Obama said on Thursday evening that he is considering
appointing an “Ebola czar” to manage the government’s response.
The C.D.C.’s inadequate advice to hospitals
on how to protect health care workers may have contributed to the latest cases.
An expert who oversaw the treatment of two American missionaries flown from
West Africa to Atlanta for treatment at Emory University Hospital told The
Times that he had warned the C.D.C. repeatedly that its guidelines were
irresponsibly lax. The guidelines allowed protective garments that left the
neck and other areas exposed. It was not until Tuesday night that the agency —
essentially acknowledging its error — issued new, stricter guidelines requiring
full-body suits covering the head and neck, as well as close supervision of the
risky process of taking off protective gear.
Unless the C.D.C. can help hospitals
prepare properly, every new case will result in improvised responses that may
not work. The hospital in Dallas has sent one of the nurses to Emory and the other
to the National Institutes of Health, two of the nation’s four specially
designated high-containment hospitals. But there are only a limited number of
beds in these institutions (N.I.H. has only two such beds), so other major
medical centers must be ready to accept cases if necessary. Some hospitals in
cities with large West African populations are taking steps to train their
staffs.
While the chance that an infected patient
will show up at any particular hospital or clinic is very small, health workers
should still know the basics of what to do if a patient arrives at their door.
National Nurses United, the country’s largest union of nurses, says there has
been almost no hands-on training, just easy-to-ignore guidance documents.
The advice now from the C.D.C. is for
emergency room staff to take travel histories, isolate patients who have fevers
and have been in West Africa, and call the C.D.C. if Ebola is suspected. Once a
case is diagnosed as Ebola, the C.D.C. will fly in a swat team of experts
within hours to oversee treatment.
At a congressional hearing on Thursday,
House members asked whether the United States was adequately protected against
people who might have been infected in West Africa but did not yet have
symptoms. The current system relies on screening before they are allowed to fly
out of West Africa and again when they reach airports in this country. So far,
only one infected patient — the man who was treated in Dallas and later died —
escaped detection at the airports since the epidemic was first identified seven
months ago. There should be some comfort in knowing that that part of the
system is working.
Even so, some members of Congress, mostly
Republicans, have called for barring entry to all people who have been in the
Ebola-stricken countries as a way to keep the virus out.
The danger is that if other nations
followed an American ban with bans of their own, economies in West Africa would
be crippled. That could only reduce the ability of those nations to fight the
epidemic, and make it even more likely the disease would spread through porous
borders to other African nations and beyond.
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